
30 December 2008 | 32 replies
Go to Lowes, Home Depot, 84 Lumber etc and ask.I use subs based on time vs money and do the rest myself like Rehab702.

6 November 2016 | 3 replies
It's a good rental property but if I wanna unload it in the future I don't want to have a really tough time selling and for the right price due to it being abnormal.

20 May 2019 | 51 replies
Looking to unload them.
21 December 2016 | 17 replies
Lumber liquidators has them.

15 October 2018 | 26 replies
Essentially the seller is saying: my street is so bad, I will sell you the house for a fraction of the cost it would take to build it, maybe for less than the lumber, shingles and windows would cost.

19 October 2016 | 29 replies
In order to find "deals", you generally have to do the same sort of hustling that good Wholesalers do - find highly motivated Sellers who don't care about the properties they've been lumbered with - even though they have such outstanding (but not always obvious) potential.Ask around to see what your local Lenders offer by way of terms and conditions.

18 July 2020 | 17 replies
Then there are others within the homeowner/investor channel that learned some tough lessons last time, and have placed mitigation efforts in their plans.Looks like all the Big Banks have set aside billions to cover loan losses, what this means is there won't be the same type of 'Fire Sales" like last time when banks were unloading properties for pennies on the dollar, they're already accounting for the loss so they can be more aggressive on the REO, which means less of a discount for us investors.

16 December 2016 | 17 replies
He is not in a good position to buy a home and 'helping' him by "unloading" (as you say) your property on him at market value is not something an ethical person would do, no offense intended.

21 November 2016 | 4 replies
Seem like this is very important, and the current owner is trying to unload this quickly without doing any of the work.

28 June 2021 | 17 replies
With lumber costs as high as I've ever seen them, renovations on these seemed it would be 50% of the entire cost of the property itself.As a New Yorker, reading stories of other BiggerPockets Investors buying houses for 100k to 150k and collecting 1200-1500 rents seems too good to be true.